82 LOUIS LOUR IOU X FRENCH PORCELAIN DINNERWARE & 0 ENWARE '"" Ptuw ...;;: ( ') # \ ........ \ ...... -*'..: ( . ..- \ ... " ......... VESCA When they compliment you for your taste, It won't be Just for the feast served on this superb French porcelain dinnerware and ovenware Choose from many sizes and shapes Wnte for brochure and name of nearest dealer Jacques Jugeat, Inc" Oept LLV, 225 Fifth Avenue. New York, N Y 10010 For people who thought they had xperienced everythIng. Votre destination: Monte Carlo. Where the air is fragrant with peñume and elegance And the seascape is painted with extravagance. Au bord de la mer: Loews Monte-Carlo. One of the world's most indulging hotels, with the Riviera's only in.hotel casino Experience it at least once in your life. *SBM/L. ws Monte Carlo For r servatfons call your travel agent LRI,lne (L. ws Representationlntemattonal) or(212). 11-.' loews Monte-Carlo On the RIviera to . ... -- -- -- '" '- .-..... ,., , '\ 4 ,.. "" , . " t, \ \ .. " " \ :: lOr \. , MAY 25, 1981 as the admissions side. Each side had about a dozen mentally retarded and multiply disabled patients. These pa- tients didn't belong on either side of Clearview or, for that matter, at Creedmoor, but in June of 1978 there were few alternative facilities for them. Some of these patients were quiet, and, because they created no problems, they were the patients most often ignored at Clearview. Others, who were disruptive, could not be ig- nored, and they caused a good deal of mischief and sometimes real grief. One patient in 044 was a skinny, in- tractable, profoundly retarded, and as- saultive young man named Kevin Kiernan. He had a misshapen head, little usable language, and a penchant for biting. He refused to wear any- thing but pajama bottoms except on the one day every month or two that his mother visited him, when he per- mitted her to dress him. He usually lay on the dayhall floor holding a maga- zine. He occasionally became violent -especially when some new and acutely psychotic patient tried to touch his magazine. He had persistently bit- ten the ear of a psychotic male patient several years earlier. The ear had healed badly. Albert Rosenthal, an- other profoundly retarded Clearview patient with only a few words in his vocabulary, was perhaps the saddest example of Creedmoor's inability to care for unfortunates of his kind. For his own protection, Rosenthal had to be kept in a glass-free environment. Whenever he saw glass, he broke it and injured himself. Once, when he was in a dining room at Creedmoor, he had cut himself with a glass salt shaker. Since 1974, he had lived in a seven-by-nine-foot room near the Clearview chart room. His cell-like quarters contained a bed and a com- mode. He spent most of the day sitting on his bed or on the floor rocking back I and forth silently. When he was upset, he banged for hours on the room's j locked door. Creedmoor's psychiatrists were periodically instructed to gradu- ally terminate the medication of all patients who had been hospitalized for five years or longer; it had been found that a number of them improved when their medication was lowered or stopped. Some got worse, however. In 1978, after Rosenthal's medication was lowered, he pulled out all his fingernails and toenails. On June 16, 1978, while Dr. Sun was screening Miss Frumkin, Rosenthal's mother was in her son's room with her other child, Gail-also a Clearview patient.